| Literature DB >> 21818351 |
Jarom Heijmans1, Vanesa Muncan, Rutger J Jacobs, Eveline S M de Jonge-Muller, Laura Graven, Izak Biemond, Antwan G Ederveen, Patrick G Groothuis, Sietse Mosselman, James C Hardwick, Daniel W Hommes, Gijs R van den Brink.
Abstract
Clinical data suggest that progestins have chemopreventive properties in the development of colorectal cancer. We set out to examine a potential protective effect of progestins and progesterone signaling on colon cancer development. In normal and neoplastic intestinal tissue, we found that the progesterone receptor (PR) is not expressed. Expression was confined to sporadic mesenchymal cells. To analyze the influence of systemic progesterone receptor signaling, we crossed mice that lacked the progesterone receptor (PRKO) to the Apc(Min/+) mouse, a model for spontaneous intestinal polyposis. PRKO-Apc(Min/+) mice exhibited no change in polyp number, size or localization compared to Apc(Min/+). To examine effects of progestins on the intestinal epithelium that are independent of the PR, we treated mice with MPA. We found no effects of either progesterone or MPA on gross intestinal morphology or epithelial proliferation. Also, in rats treated with MPA, injection with the carcinogen azoxymethane did not result in a difference in the number or size of aberrant crypt foci, a surrogate end-point for adenoma development. We conclude that expression of the progesterone receptor is limited to cells in the intestinal mesenchyme. We did not observe any effect of progesterone receptor signaling or of progestin treatment in rodent models of intestinal tumorigenesis.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21818351 PMCID: PMC3144908 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0022620
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Progesterone Receptor expression in mesenchymal cells in the intestine, not in the epithelium.
A–E) PR immunohistochemistry on the mouse colon (A) and small intestine (B,C) where rare cells express PR (arrowhead). And in an adenoma of an Apc mouse (D). PR is widely expressed in the mouse uterus (E). F,G) In situ hybridization in mouse uterus (F) and small intestine (G). All murine tissue shown was taken from A female animal in diestrous stage, when progesterone is high [39]. H–J) PR Expression in the human colon is located in mesenchymal cells (I) and the smooth muscle layer (J), similar to the mouse intestine. For in situ hybridization, thick (10 µm) sections were used, which makes identification of mesenchymal cells difficult. K) PR immunoblot on the mouse colon and small intestine. L) PR immunoblot on a panel of colon cancer cell lines shows no expression of either PR-A or PR-B isoform. The breast cancer cell line T47D is used as a positive control.
Antibodies used for immunohistochemical detection of PR.
| Company | Antigen | Clone | Raised in animal | Antigen retrieval | Dilution used |
| ABR | PR | MA1-410 | Rabbit polyclonal | Citrate | 1∶400 |
| Dako | PR | A0098 | Rabbit Polyclonal | Citrate | 1∶400 |
| NeoMarkers | PR | SP2 | Rabbit Monoclonal | Citrate | 1∶200 |
| NeoMarkers | PR | AB13 | Rabbit Polyclonal | Citrate | 1∶1000 |
| Roche | BrdU | BMC 9318 | Mouse Monoclonal | Citrate | 1∶200 |
Figure 2Lack of off-target effects from progestins on intestinal proliferation or development of acfs.
A) Treatment of a panel of colon cancer cell lines with MPA or progesterone (P4) has no effect on viability at relevant concentrations. B) BrdU incorporation in small intestine or colon after challenging female animals with MPA or progesterone (P4) for four consecutive days. C–E) Acf count in the Azoxymethane treated rat shows acf number (C), localization of acfs throughout the colon (D) and multiplicity (E) (number of crypts per acf).
Figure 3The Progesterone receptor has no influence on intestinal polyposis.
A–C) Development of spontaneous polyposis in the Apc mouse is not altered by PRKO (10 female animals per genotype).